“I tend not to get involved in primaries,” added the
conservative firebrand, one of Donald Trump's fiercest
supporters, when asked twice on whether she would support Cruz's
reelection bid.

Coulter laced into Cruz throughout the interview, calling the
former Republican presidential candidate a “little wild
sometimes” and arguing he was a “kind of tedious nails on a
blackboard speaker.”

“At one point or another, everybody would kind of get a queasy
feeling,” the 11-time New York Times bestselling author said of
Cruz.

"This idea that he’s kind of an opportunist, and maybe he was
going with the Bush team, remember he worked on Bush’s first
election," she added, referring to former President George W.
Bush. "And then he gets shunted out of the White House into, what
was it, the Federal Trade Commission. People just — he seems to
have kind of a grating personalty.”

Coulter said that Cruz perhaps did the “outsider role” a “bit too
much.”

“I mean, you can fight for your principles without being the most
hated member of the United States Senate,” he said. “And he was
not telling the truth. There was a reason Donald Trump called him
‘Lyin Ted.’ Now, he was at least smart enough unlike the rest of
them, to imitate Trump’s positions.”

“But he was born in Canada, not a natural born citizen, can’t be
president.”

The “final straw” with Cruz came when he delivered his “utterly
self-indulgent speech at the Republican National Convention,”
Coulter said.

“I mean, don’t give a speech if you’re not going to endorse the
candidate,” she said. “We’re a party and this has been happening
throughout Trump’s campaign. He keeps extending the olive branch.
He keeps trying to play fair with the RNC and the party. He takes
the pledge.”

Coulter has found herself in a bit of an awkward position this
week, as Trump has considerably softened his immigration stance —
the one thing she said could cause her to retract her
support.